Inside the issue, the popstar and social-media titan shares details of her difficult and transformative past year with Vogue’s Giles Hattersley, including how she coped with symptoms of post-traumatic stress disorder in the wake of the Manchester bombing. “It’s hard to talk about because so many people have suffered such severe, tremendous loss. But, yeah, it’s a real thing,” she says. “I know those families and my fans, and everyone there experienced a tremendous amount of it as well. Time is the biggest thing. I feel like I shouldn’t even be talking about my own experience – like I shouldn’t even say anything. I don’t think I’ll ever know how to talk about it and not cry.”

PTSD is actually really serious, and it sounds like Grande might have survivor’s guilt as well. I’m not particularly a fan of Grande because I’m not a 17-year-old girl, but I am a human being with empathy and I assume being targeted by some religious fanatic who kills 22 of your fans for some nebulous belief that pop music is Satanic is going to leave an emotional scar that might never heal. And that’s on top of working for Dan Schneider.